News of Note

CRA publishes the December 2025 CTF Roundtable

The Rulings Directorate has published the official version of the December 2, 2025 CTF Roundtable. For your convenience, the table below links to the 14 questions and our summaries of them (which we published in December, with the exception of Q.12, which was first released this week).

Topic Descriptor
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 1, 2025-1080781C6 - Avoidance of subsection 80(3) on settlement of debt. Income Tax Act - Section 61.3 - Subsection 61.3(1) use of s. 61.3 to avoid application of s. 80(13) notwithstanding transfer of NCLs to parent, was abusive
Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) abuse to generate two losses out of the same investment
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 2, 2025-1080681C6 - Loan Restructuring and Application of the General Anti-Avoidance Rule Income Tax Act - Section 20 - Subsection 20(1) - Paragraph 20(1)(c) - Subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i) no GAAR abuse in using tracing to convert a personal-use to investment-use loan
Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4.1) structuring to convert a personal-use to an investment-use loan is not contrary to the revised GAAR
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 3, 2025-1080671C6 - T1134 Reporting Income Tax Act - Section 233.4 - Subsection 233.4(2) - Paragraph 233.4(2)(a) once a Canadian corp has even a fleeting direct equity percentage in an FA, a T1134 reporting obligation is triggered (subject to group-filing relief) for that year
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 4, 2025-1080661C6 - T1134 – Partnerships and the meaning of “Related Group” Income Tax Act - Section 233.4 - Subsection 233.4(4) application of group relief policy to a partnership
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 5, 2025-1080691C6 - Intergenerational Business Transfer – control requirement in subparagraphs 84.1(2.31)(f)(i) and (2.32)(g)(i) Income Tax Act - Section 84.1 - Subsection 84.1(2.31) - Paragraph 84.1(2.31)(f) - Subparagraph 84.1(2.31)(f)(i) the continued-control test in s. 84.1(2.31)(f)(i) or (2.32)(g)(i) does not require that each member of the purchaser corp control group remain a child of the taxpayer
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 6, 2025-1080701C6 - Intergenerational Business Transfer – Relevant Group Entity Income Tax Act - Section 84.1 - Subsection 84.1(2.31) - Paragraph 84.1(2.31)(c) - Subparagraph 84.1(2.31)(c)(iii) a related Rentalco would generally not be a relevant group entity
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 7, 2025-1080791C6 - Treaty-Protected Business Treaties - Income Tax Conventions - Article 8 a single cross-border transport business would be required to allocate between its exempted and taxable component using arm’s length principles
Income Tax Act - Section 111 - Subsection 111(9) losses from the non-Treaty-exempted portion of a Canadian branch business may be carried over to the taxable profits of such portion in other years
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 8, 2025-1080721C6 - Whether a Beneficiary under a Trust is Affiliated with a Corporation Controlled by the Trust Income Tax Act - Section 251.1 - Subsection 251.1(1) - Paragraph 251.1(1)(b) - Subparagraph 251.1(1)(b)(ii) the majority-interest beneficiary of a discretionary trust was not affiliated with a subsidiary of the trust
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 9, 2025-1080731C6 - Subsection 191(4) and specified amount Income Tax Act - Section 191 - Subsection 191(4) specified amounts must be crystallized dollars, and a PAC can increase a redemption amount above the specified amount
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 10, 2025-1080811C6 - Gross Negligence Penalty and Labour Requirements Income Tax Act - Section 127.46 - Subsection 127.46(9) those claiming full clean economy credits should take “reasonable steps” to ensure compliance by their subcontractors with the union labour-rate requirements
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 11, 2025-1080761C6 - Subsection 98(5) Income Tax Act - Section 98 - Subsection 98(5) the former partnership business need not be carried on continuously throughout the 3-month period referred to in s. 98(5)
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 12, 2025-1080801C6 - Interaction of Subsection 150(1.2) of the Income Tax Act and Subsection 204.2(1) of the Income Tax Regulations Income Tax Regulations - Regulation 204.2 - Subsection 204.2(1) an excepted trust listed in s. 150(1.2) is not subject to Sched. 15 reporting even if it is not an express trust
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 13, 2025-1080821C6 - Expanding the Scope of Advance Income Tax Rulings General Concepts - Audit, Filing and Assessment Procedure CRA is expanding the circumstances in which it may be prepared to issue rulings on factual matters
2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q. 14, 2025-1080711C6 - Subsection 83(2) Election in the Context of a Subsection 84(3) Deemed Dividend Income Tax Act - Section 83 - Subsection 83(2) CRA's position, that s. 83(2) election forms and resolutions must specify dollar amounts, extends to s. 84(3) deemed dividends

Ngoy – Quebec Court of Appeal allows a tax appeal on the basis of inadequate reasons

The taxpayers' appeal was allowed, and the matter was referred back to the Court of Quebec for a fresh adjudication, given that, in the appealed decision, the judge had not addressed the issue before her in her reasons for judgment (namely, whether the ARQ was justified in using the indirect cash flow method to arrive at its assessments of the taxpayer) otherwise than to quote the ARQ pleadings at length.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Ngoy v. Agence du revenu du Québec, 2026 QCCA 193 under Federal Courts Act, s. 27(1.3).

CRA confirms that an excepted trust listed in s. 150(1.2) is not subject to Sched. 15 reporting even if it is not an express trust

CRA confirmed that the exceptions to the required Sched. 15 reporting in proposed Reg. 204.2(1), provided for in proposed ss. 150(1.2)(a) to (r), are not restricted to trusts described in the preamble to s. 150(1.2), i.e., (outside Quebec) express trusts – so that such exceptions to the Sched 15 filing requirement apply to any trust which has a filing obligation pursuant to s. 150(1)(c) regardless of whether or not it is resident in Canada and an express trust.

The point of statutory interpretation is that where one provision (Reg. 204.2(1)) assimilates by reference parts of another provision (the listing of excepted trusts in ss. 150(1.2)(a) to (r)) which can be read on a standalone basis, it is not impliedly assimilating the balance of that other provision (e.g., the express trust limitation in the s. 150(1.2) preamble).

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 2 December 2025 CTF Roundtable Q.12, 2025-1080801C6 under Reg. 204.2(1).

Income Tax Severed Letters 25 February 2026

This morning's release of 14 severed letters from the Income Tax Rulings Directorate is now available for your viewing.

CRA indicates that interest capitalized to building inventory is not IFE under the EIFEL rules

CRA referred to Oryx, Shofar and Easter Law Trust for the proposition that “the cost of inventory is not considered to be a deductible expense in computing a taxpayer’s income in the year in which the inventory is sold”. On this basis, it concluded that where interest expense was capitalized to the cost of inventory under s. 18(3.1)(b), it would not be included under A(a) of the "interest and financing expenses" (IFE) definition in s. 18.2(1), even though it would effectively be deducted as part of the cost of goods sold on the sale of the inventory.

A(a)(ii) requires that the interest be deductible in the year in which it was incurred. Thus, the same result would be achieved on a plain reading to the extent the interest was capitalized in a year prior to the sale. However, the above CRA approach indicates that the interest also would not be included in IFE even to the extent that it was capitalized in the year of the sale.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 5 November 2025 External T.I. 2025-1066661E5 under s. 18.2(1) – IFE – A(a).

We have translated 7 more CRA interpretations

We have translated a CRA interpretation issued last weeks and 6 CRA interpretations released in October and September of 1999. Their descriptors and links appear below.

These are additions to our set of 3,491 full-text translations of French-language Technical Interpretation and Roundtable items (plus some ruling letters) of the Income Tax Rulings Directorate, which covers all of the last 26 years of releases of such items by the Directorate. These translations are subject to our paywall (applicable after the 5th of each month).

Bundle Date Translated severed letter Summaries under Summary descriptor
2026-02-18 20 November 2025 External T.I. 2022-0940101E5 F - AAPE - Sommes déposées en fidéicommis - contrat d’arrangements préalables de services funéraires Income Tax Act - Section 248 - Subsection 248(1) - Small Business Corporation funeral prepayments received in trust under the applicable Quebec Act are not assets of a funeral company
1999-10-29 9 April 1999 External T.I. 9901735 F - CREDIT D'IMPOT POUR EMPLOI A L'ETRANGER Income Tax Act - Section 122.3 - Subsection 122.3(1) how to count a month
1999-10-01 10 September 1999 External T.I. 9901545 F - DIRECTORS LIABILITY - ABIL Income Tax Act - Section 40 - Subsection 40(2) - Paragraph 40(2)(g) - Subparagraph 40(2)(g)(ii) loss from debt of insolvent corporation that arose to directors as a result of their paying its GST was denied
1 September 1999 External T.I. 9901805 F - CONCESSION FORESTIERE Income Tax Regulations - Schedules - Schedule VI - Section 5 merchantable timber refers to marketable trees
Income Tax Regulations - Schedules - Schedule VI - Section 1 - Paragraph 1(a) - Subparagraph 1(a)(i) only timber from cut trees that will eventually be sold is taken into account
Income Tax Regulations - Schedules - Schedule VI - Section 2 - Paragraph 2(b) timber that is measured is merchantable timber
1 September 1999 External T.I. 9903265 F - ACTIONS ACCREDITIVES Income Tax Act - Section 66 - Subsection 66(15) - Flow-Through Share flow-through share can be issued pursuant to a subscription agreement signed by the broker as agent
General Concepts - Agency the tax consequences of a transaction are to be determined as treating the agreement of an agent as that of issued pursuant to a subscription agreement signed by the broker as agent
2 September 1999 External T.I. 9909015 F - COUT EN CAPITAL D'UNE PCMC Income Tax Act - Section 13 - Subsection 13(21) - Undepreciated Capital Cost - A capital cost of film determined in accordance with GAAP
Income Tax Act - Section 18 - Subsection 18(1) - Paragraph 18(1)(a) - Income-Producing Purpose provincial capital tax is deductible
1999-09-17 31 August 1999 External T.I. 9921895 F - TRANSFERT D'ALLOCATION DE RETRAITE Income Tax Act - Section 60 - Paragraph 60(j.1) - Subparagraph 60(j.1)(ii) - Clause 60(j.1)(ii)(B) detailed example of s. 60(j.1)(ii)(B) where 50% vesting

Suncor Energy – Federal Court of Appeal finds that, to effect the s. 13(31) continuity rule, the transferee of depreciable property is deemed to have taxation years before its formation

In approximate terms, s. 13(27)(b) deems the available-for-use rules to be satisfied once two actual taxation year ends have passed following the acquisition of the depreciable property. In this regard, s. 13(31)(a) deems a property acquired in a non-arm's length transfer to have been acquired when it was acquired by the transferor.

The Crown effectively asserted that the s. 13(31) continuity rule did not work where the transferee had been newly formed, as it did not have any taxation years that could be counted from the time of the original acquisition of the depreciable property by the transferor to the time of formation of the transferee. In rejecting that position, Webb J.A. stated that “[i]t is a necessary implication of the deemed acquisition of property at a particular time [pursuant to s. 13(31)] that such time must occur during a taxation year” and that “[o]therwise, the time period in paragraph 13(27)(b) would never commence” so that “the purpose of subsection 13(31) of the Act [, which] is to provide for continuity of ownership between non-arm’s-length parties when applying the rule in paragraph 13(27)(b)” would not be met.

Support for this proposition included that the s. 13(31) rule, by virtue of s. 13(31)(b), extended to depreciable properties transferred on a butterfly, for which the transferee corporations are typically Newcos - which contradicted the Crown's view that Newcos could not benefit under the s.13(27)(b) rule by reference to the time of the depreciable property’s acquisition by the non-arm's length transferor.

Neal Armstrong. Summaries of Suncor Energy Inc. v. Canada, 2026 FCA 33 under s. 13(31) and Statutory Interpretation – Interpretation provisions.

DAC Investment – Federal Court of Appeal finds that it was an abuse of s. 250(5.1) and of ss. 123.3 and 123.4 for a CCPC to continue to BVI before realizing a capital gain

With a view to its imminent disposition of the shares of a subsidiary, the taxpayer continued to the British Virgin Islands. As a result, it ceased to be a Canadian-controlled private corporation (CCPC) and became a private corporation that was not a CCPC, with its central management and control remaining in Ontario.

In reversing the Tax Court, Woods, J.A., confirmed CRA's reassessment made on the basis that the resulting non-application of the imposition of refundable tax under s. 123.3, and of accessing the rate reduction under s. 123.4, on the taxable capital gain on the sale was an abuse of those provisions and of the continuance rule in s. 250(5.1).

In particular, the continuance rule was intended to make “tax provisions fairer for corporations moving into or leaving Canada by way of continuance” (para. 72), whereas, here, the continuance had an “inconsequential” business effect (para. 73) and served mostly to abuse an “anti-deferral” rationale of ss. 123.3 and 123.4, namely, ensuring that “investment income should be taxed the same whether it is received directly or through a private corporation” (para. 46).

Woods J.A. also rejected a submission by the taxpayer that it was reasonable to apply s. 245(2) on the basis that the reassessment period for the taxpayers should be the normal reassessment period for a CCPC, i.e., three years rather than four, so that the reassessment at issue was statute-barred. She indicated that the legislative history of the GAAR rule demonstrated that it had been narrowed to only deny tax benefits that resulted from the avoidance transactions, rather than to produce any other results that might be considered reasonable in the circumstances.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Canada v. DAC Investment Holdings Inc., 2026 FCA 35 under s. 245(4).

CRA finds that a corporation is not affiliated with itself for purposes of the EIFEL – excluded interest rules

A Co and its wholly owned subsidiary, B Co (both taxable Canadian corporations) were the only partners of a partnership. A Co owed interest to the partnership.

Whether the interest qualified as "excluded interest" (e.g., so as to be excluded from the interest and financing expenses of A Co for EIFEL purposes if so elected) turned on the requirement under s. (d)(ii)(A) of the definition thereof that each member of the partnership be an "eligible group entity" in respect of A Co. Since B Co clearly was affiliated with A Co, this turned on whether the taxpayer (A Co) was affiliated with the other member of the partnership (A Co), i.e., on whether A Co was affiliated with itself.

In rejecting this proposition (so that it did not consider the interest to be excluded interest), CRA stated:

Subsection 251.1(1) delineates the meaning of “affiliated persons” or “persons affiliated with each other”, for the purposes of the Act. It does not deem a corporation to be affiliated with itself. For the purpose of applying section 251.1, to establish whether two different entities or persons are affiliated, paragraph 251.1(4)(a) states that “persons are affiliated with themselves”. There is no specific rule deeming a corporation to be affiliated with itself, for the purpose of the “excluded interest” election. Therefore [s. (d)(ii)(A)] would not be satisfied.

In reaching this conclusion, we kept in mind the main rationale of the “excluded interest” election, namely the facilitation of typical loss consolidation transactions [as per the Explanatory Notes].

The contrary view could also be argued: Nowhere in s. 251.1 does it state that affiliated persons must be “two different entities” and s. 251.1(4)(a) states the opposite. S. 251.1(4)(a) deems a person to be affiliated with itself for the purposes of s. 251.1, which constitutes a comprehensive code for determining whether persons are affiliated. Therefore, a person may generally be affiliated with itself, including under the EIFEL rules. Furthermore, the statement by the CRA that the “main” rationale of the excluded interest election is to deal with typical loss consolidation transactions acknowledges that there are other uses of the excluded interest election. (For a harder case that nonetheless resulted in an expansive application of a deeming provision, see Canada v. Olsen, 2002 FCA 3.)

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 18 November 2025 Roundtable, 2025-1082041C6 - TEI 2025 – Q. C.4 under s. 18.2(1) – excluded interest - (d)(ii)(A).

CRA confirms that funeral prepayments received in trust under the applicable Quebec Act are not assets of a funeral company

CRA confirmed that amounts received under a prearranged funeral services contract which are required to be held in trust under s. 21 of the Quebec Act respecting arrangements for funeral services and sepultures (the “LASFS”) by the recipient funeral-services corporation, are not considered assets of that corporation for the purposes of the definitions of small business corporation and qualified small business corporation share.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 20 November 2025 External T.I. 2022-0940101E5 F under s. 248(1) – SBC.